Beyond the World Bank

The Fight for Universal Social Protection in the Global South

  • Open Access
Beyond the World Bank cover

Beyond the World Bank

The Fight for Universal Social Protection in the Global South

  • Open Access
Quantity
Pre-order. Available Dec 11 2025
$118.35 RRP $131.50 Website price saving $13.15 (10%)

Payment for this pre-order will be taken when the item becomes available

Description

In this open access book, Matthew Greenslade sheds some much-needed light on the damage being done by the World Bank's insistence on pursuing a poverty-targeted approach to social protection in lower income countries, while also describing some of the successes in the grassroots fights for a more universal approach.

All this is organized around the true story of Stephen Kidd, an ex-missionary who cut his teeth fighting for indigenous land rights in Latin America, then survived an assassination attempt, and ultimately went on to be a leader in the global fight for universal social protection.

Incorporating perspectives from academia, NGOs, CSOs, and activists, Greenslade shows, through Kidd's story, nearly half of the world population, the overwhelming majority in low-income countries, does not have access to the sorts of welfare and benefits programs that protect many people in the Global North. This means little to no protection in vulnerable times of life or against crises such as pandemics and climate-related events, and much less chance of building sustainable economies and the transition to low-carbon growth. Governments in the Global South are working to fill this gap, but all too often, their World-Bank-led support from the Global North pushes poverty-targeted programmes that are error-strewn, can cause social unrest, and can ultimately set back the development of universal social protection systems for years, if not decades. Yet as Greenslade also shows, collaborations among the United Nations, NGOs, academia, and practitioners such as Kidd are supporting Global South governments in pushing for more sustainable, home-grown, human-rights-aligned, universally available systems of development and protection. In the face of the ever-growing global challenges of the climate crisis and rising inequality, the urgency of these initiatives cannot be overstated.

The eBook editions of this book are available open access under a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 licence on bloomsburycollections.com. Open access was funded by the Act Church of Sweden.

Table of Contents

Definition of Social Protection
Glossary
Preface
Introduction

Chapter 1. London: Listening to an Economist From Malawi
Chapter 2. Paraguay: Learning From the Enxet
Chapter 3. Fiji: An Addiction to Sugar
Chapter 4. Chile and the Development of the Proxy Means Test
Chapter 5. Indonesia: How To Help a Quarter of a Billion People
Chapter 6. Istanbul: The World Bank's Love for Conditional Cash Transfers
Chapter 7. Uganda: In the Heart of Africa
Chapter 8. Support the Poor but Make Them Work for It
Chapter 9. A Meeting in Geneva: The Advance of Universality
Chapter 10. Nepal: Maoism and the Myth of Unaffordability
Chapter 11. Mauritius, Zanzibar and Kenya: East Africa Takes Control
Chapter 12. And Then Things Went Silly: Social Registries
Chapter 13. Other Arenas in Asia and the Arabian Peninsula
Chapter 14. It's Full of Intelligent People, so Why Does the World Bank Do It?
Chapter 15. Winning the Battle for Universality

Afterword
Annex
Bibliography
Acknowledgements

Product details

Bloomsbury Academic Test
Published Dec 11 2025
Format Hardback
Edition 1st
Extent 256
ISBN 9781350508811
Imprint Bloomsbury Academic
Dimensions 234 x 156 mm
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

About the contributors

Author

Matthew Greenslade

Matthew Greenslade is an economist who has worked…

Related Titles

Environment: Staging